Baltimore Cooperage Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore

3 Balt. C. Rep. 429
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMay 26, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 429 (Baltimore Cooperage Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Cooperage Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 429 (Md. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

DAWKINS, J.—

The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendant from removing the brick pavement in front of the plaintiffs’ premises on Ostend street and other streets surrounding their manufacturing plant and from instituting any criminal proceedings for failure to comply with notices given to repair sidewalks in front of said premises with cement and from laying any lien or tax against the plaintiffs’ property. The defendants claim the right to lay said pavement in accordance with such notice under a certain ordinance of the Mayor and City Council, approved June 2G, 1915, which said ordinance repeals and amends Sections 22 and 2S of the Baltimore City Code of 1906 as amended by Ordinance 102 of May 10, 1912. The plaintiffs contend that the enforcement of said ordinance would be a great hardship upon them, and that the ordinance is arbitrary, unfair and void, especially in that the said ordinance assumes to delegate to one of the defendants, to wit, the City Engineer, a broad, unjust, oppressive, unreasonable, elective and discretionary power which the Mayor and City Council have no power to delegate under the provisions of the City Charter. The plaintiffs further claim that the present brick pavement is much better than a cement pavement (as indicated by the notice of the Engineer should be laid) would be, so that to take up the present pavement would be a confiscation of property without warrant or authority and without compensation. The plaintiffs also claim that the present pavement was laid about eighteen months before the bill was filed in compliance with notices then sent by the defendants and is in good condition.

The defendants deny the essential allegations of the bill, especially as to the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the ordinance in question, contenting themselves with the allegation that a new ce2nent footway is a necessary improvement and is properly required by law and under the law it can be required to be laid.

The ordinance in question provides that “if the proprietor * * * of any lot * * * fronting on any paved street * * * shall neglect or refuse to fill up * * * llave or repair the footways * * * for the space of ten days after service of a printed or written order * * * then the City Engineer is authorized and directed to have the said footways filled up, dug down, paved or repaired with cement stone, or brick, in the discretion of the City Engineer, in a sufficient and substantial manner, or repaired in such manner as the City Engineer shall think proper,” and a tax is imposed, etc. And the City Engineer is further “authorized to direct and require by written or printed order the proprietor * * * to fill, up, dig down to the proper grade or to pave, repair or repave the footways * * * with a good and sufficient pavement of ce2nent stone, or brick, to be selected and approved by the City Engineer, of such width from the curbstone as the City Engineer shall direct, not less than four feet and all the thoroughfares or business streets of the city shall be paved to the building line if thought requisite by the City Engineer,” and in the event of failure to comply, a fine is imposed, etc.

A proper conclusion might be reached in this particular case, without passing upon the constitutionality of the ordinance, but as all the aspects of the matter involved have been exhaustively discussed at the hearing, it seems proper that this Court’s view should be given, as there are so many cases that have been more or less waiting the result of this case.

At the presentation of the evidence the city officials refused to admit that it is the fixed policy of the city to cause the removal of brick pavements and the substitute therefor of cement, even though the pavements now down were iii good condition.

There would seem to be but two questions to be determined:

1. Is the ordinance above cited constitutional and such a one as the Mayor and City Council have a right to pass and enforce through its agents by delegating the power which is possesses under its Charter?

2. If the above be answered in the affirmative, ‘is the proposed enforcement as shown by the facts in this case a reasonable and proper exercise of the authority given?

Under the City Charter, Section 6, the Mayor and City Council are given very wide and broad powers of control, such as-the size of bricks to be used in houses, to regulate party walls, to regulate the erection of steps, piers, etc., of [431]*431houses, to lay out, open, extend, widen, straighten, close streets, to provide by ordinance for change, to pave, curb, repair, recurb, etc., any street, lane or alley in the city, to regulate use of streets, sidewalks, etc., to pass all ordinances for grading, regulating paving and repairing streets. Whilst the legislature has given wide power of control, it has not given absolute power. 125 Md., Thrift vs. Laird.

It is a settled principle that public powers or trusts devolved by law or by charter on a council or governing body, can not; bo delegated to others. Leaving to the City Commissioners the determination of certain questions solely within the power of the Mayor and City Council was held to be wrong in the case of Baltimore vs. Scharf, 54 Md. 4Ü9, but the Court said in that case that the leaving to the City Commissioners the determination of the question where the curbing needs replacing was not a violation of the principle stated. To determine s,uch a question by special ordinance would be impracticable.

In 92 Md. 535, Stewart vs. Baltimore, the ordinance under discussion was objected to because it, delegated to the City Engineer a discretion as to whether the street should be paved with sheet asphalt or with vitrified bricks. The discretion given was to use either bricks or asphalt on certain parts of gutters or tracks. This discretion could not very well be lodged with any one except with the City Engineer, who was to do the work. It was held not to be an improper delegation of a legislative authority.

In 104 Md., Calían case, at page 150, the Court says that the principle is a plain one that the public powers or trusts devolved by law or charter upon the council to bo exercised by it when and in such manner as it shall judge best can not be delegated to others, but the ordinance in that case limits the materials to be adopted and that one of them should be used, giving the Board of Awards, a city official board, the right to designate which one was to be used. The Court held that such a use of a subordinate agency was not an improper delegation of authority.

This case criticises Stewart case, 92 Md. 551, as expressing an obiter and as upholding (page 153) an ordinance which left the kind of pavement to be laid to the opinion of the City Engineer.

The ordinance discussed in 123 Md., Wollman’s case, at page 318, etc., which gives to the clerk of the markets power to fix rent of stalls, stands, etc., was objected to because the fixing of rent is claimed to be a legislative and not an administrative power and duty, and can not be lawfully delegated by the Mayor and City Council to the clerk of the markets. It was held to be an administrative and not a legislative function to delegate to a clerk of markets its ministerial agents as provided by the ordinance to fix the rents in question.

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Related

Mayor of Baltimore v. Stewart
48 A. 165 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1901)
State Ex Rel. Arnold v. Amon Green & Co.
52 A. 673 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
King v. Hamill
54 A. 625 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1903)
Alberger v. Mayor of Baltimore
20 A. 988 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-cooperage-co-v-mayor-of-baltimore-mdcirctctbalt-1916.